Although the number of poor children in America has
declined by 3.6 million since hitting a recent peak in 1993, a study the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities issued today finds that progress in reducing child poverty has slowed
markedly since 1995 and that children who remain poor have become poorer since 1995.

The study, "Changes
Since 1995 in the Safety Net's Impact on Child Poverty," finds that
the average amount by which poor children fall below the poverty line increased between
1995 and 1998, reaching the highest level recorded since data on this matter first were
collected in 1979. The study is based on Census data and measures poverty after both cash
and non-cash government benefits as well as taxes are taken into account. This is the
approach most researchers recommend.

The study finds two principal trends at work since 1995. On the one
hand, increases in employment and wages  along with expansion of the Earned Income
Tax Credit (a tax credit for low-income working families)  have reduced child
poverty. On the other hand, several major safety net programs have contracted
substantially and now reduce child poverty less than in the past.

According to the study, the principal programs that have contracted
and now reduce child poverty substantially less are the food stamp program and cash
assistance for poor families with children. The numbers of children whom these programs
serve have decreased sharply since 1995. The study found that to be the principal reason
that poor children grew somewhat poorer during this period.

Between 1995 and 1998, the number of children who were poor declined
10 percent. But the number of children receiving food stamps fell 27 percent during this
period, exceeding the decline in need, while the number receiving cash assistance dropped
36 percent.

At the same time, the study found, the Earned Income Tax Credit
expanded between 1995 and 1998 and reduced child poverty to a much greater degree in 1998
than it had three years earlier.

"Amidst the good news of economic growth and decreases in the
total number of poor children, it is troubling that those children who remain poor have
slipped somewhat deeper into poverty," said Kathryn Porter, co-author of the report.
"While the robust economy is helping many families, others are being affected
adversely by the contraction in some parts of the safety net."

Other study findings include:

The number of children who were poor (after counting government
benefits and taxes, including the EITC) fell by 2.4 million between 1993 and 1995, but by
1.2 million between 1995 and 1998. On an annual basis, the number of children who are poor
fell at a rate of 1.2 million in the 1993-1995 period and 400,000 in the 1995-1998 period.

In 1995, the incomes of children who were poor (after government
benefits and taxes are counted) fell an average of $1,471 below the poverty line. In 1998,
these children fell an average of $1,604 below the poverty line. The $1,604 figure
represents the largest such figure on record since these data began being collected in
1979. This means that poor children were poorer, on average, in 1998 than in any year back
to 1979.

The "child poverty gap" is the total amount by which all
children who are poor fall below the poverty line. The child poverty gap, measured before
government benefits and taxes are counted, was nearly $7 billion  or 15 percent
 smaller in 1998 than in 1995. This shows that increases in employment and earnings
substantially reduced the child poverty gap over this period.

But after government benefits and taxes are taken into
account, the decrease in the child poverty gap between 1995 and 1998 nearly vanishes,
shrinking to only $400 million, a mere two percent improvement over the 1995-1998 period.
The decrease in the safety net's effectiveness in reducing the child poverty gap largely
canceled out the beneficial effect of the increase in employment and wages.

In 1995, government benefit programs and taxes reduced the child
poverty gap by 63 percent. In 1998, they shrank the child poverty gap by 57 percent, a
significantly smaller percentage.

In 1995, some 88 children received food stamps for every 100 children
who were poor before receipt of government benefits based on income. In 1998, some 72
children received food stamps for every 100 such poor children.

Similarly, in 1995, some 57 children received cash assistance for
every 100 such poor children. In 1998, some 41 children did, the lowest proportion since
1970. Together, food stamps and cash assistance programs for low-income families reduced
the child poverty gap by 37 percent in 1995 but by 27 percent in 1998.

While the safety net narrowed the child poverty gap less in
1998 than in 1995, the impact of these programs in reducing thechild poverty rate
 which measures the proportion of children who are poor  was the same in both
years. In both 1995 and 1998, safety net programs lifted out of poverty one-third of the
children who would have been poor without these programs. Although food stamps and cash
assistance programs lifted a smaller proportion of such children out of poverty in 1998
than in 1995, the EITC lifted out a larger proportion.

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
is a nonpartisan research organization and policy institute that conducts research and
analysis on a range of government policies and programs. It is supported primarily by
foundation grants.